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Chapter no 14

Happy Place

HAPPY PLACE

MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS, NEW YORK CITY

A FOUR-BEDROOM APARTMENTย that the five of us can barely afford. One full bathroom, with a rigid shower schedule (organized by Sabrina), and a half bathroom we call the โ€œemergency canโ€ because thereโ€™s nothing but a toilet and a lightbulb with a chain in it, and itโ€™s creepy as hell.

Original hardwood floors that bow in the middle, tired of holding up grad studentsโ€™ thrift store furniture for generations. Windows that get stuck for days at a time and must simply be left, tried again later. When itโ€™s hot or when itโ€™s raining, the smell of cigarettes past seeps faintly out of the walls, reminding us that weโ€™re passing through, that this building has stood here since long before we came to this city, and will be here long after we leave.

After Wynโ€™s and my first kiss, in the cellar over the summer, Iโ€™d expected that to be it: our curiosity satisfied, our crush squashed. Instead, the moment the door to our shared room at the cottage closed, heโ€™d lifted me against him, kissed me like only seconds had passed.

Still, we took it slow that first night, kissing for hours before finally taking off each otherโ€™s clothes.ย Are you sure, heโ€™d whispered, and I was.

Will we still be friends after this, Iโ€™d whispered, and heโ€™d smiled as he told me,ย Youโ€™ve never been just a friend to me.

Heโ€™d laid me gently in his twin bed, and when the creak of the bed frame threatened to give us away, we moved to the floor, hands tangling, and

whispered into each otherโ€™s mouths and hands and throats, trying not to call out each otherโ€™s names to the dark.

Every night after had been the same. We were friendly until the door closed, and then we were something else entirely.

Still, when we moved into the new place with the othersโ€”so I could start medical school, and Sabrina could begin 1L at Columbia Law, and Cleo could take up her post at an urban farm in Brooklynโ€”I expected this delicate thing to fizzle.

Instead, it heightens. When everyoneโ€™s around, we find seconds of privacy, steal brushes of each otherโ€™s shoulders and hips, the bare skin just beneath our shirts. And when weโ€™re alone, the minute the front door snicks shut, he tugs me into his closet-sized roomโ€”since I share one with Cleoโ€” and for a few minutes, we donโ€™t have to be quiet. I tell him what I want. He tells me how it feels. And this thing between us isnโ€™t a secret.

Though maybe the secret is what makes it fun for him.

One night, while everyone else is out, we lie in his bed, his hand tugging at each of my curls in turn. โ€œIf we arenโ€™t friends,โ€ I ask, โ€œwhat is this?โ€

He studies me through the dark, smoothing my hair back from my forehead so tenderly. โ€œI donโ€™t know. I just need more of it.โ€

He kisses me again, slow and languid, like for once we have all the time in the world. He pulls me on top of him, his hands soft on my waist, our eyes holding. Our breaths rise and break together, our hands knotting against his headboard as he murmurs into my mouth, โ€œHarriet,ย finally.โ€

Finally. The word pumps through my veins:ย Finally.ย You. Finally.

Iโ€™m on the verge of crying, and Iโ€™m not sure why, except that this is so intense. So different than itโ€™s ever been.

โ€œI changed my mind,โ€ he tells me. โ€œI think youโ€™re my best friend.โ€ I laugh against his cheek. โ€œBetter than Parth?โ€

โ€œOh, much better,โ€ he teases. โ€œAfter tonight, he canโ€™t compete.โ€

โ€œI think you should know,โ€ I say, โ€œCleo and Sabrina are my best friends.

But youโ€™re my favorite man Iโ€™ve ever met.โ€

He turns his smile in to kiss the inside of my elbow. โ€œI can live with that.โ€

We donโ€™t talk about what it means or how it will end, but we talk about everything else, text all day, every day, even from the same room.

He sends pictures of the new mystery releases during his shifts at Freemanโ€™s to see if I want them. Or samples of fabric from the upscale reupholstery job he goes toย afterย his bookstore shifts, especially the more abstract textiles that inevitably look extremely and only like vaginas or penises.

I fire back illustrations from the medical journals Iโ€™m poring over, or give the textiles informal diagnoses, or send screenshots of Google image searches for cowboys and ask him,ย Are any of these your relatives?ย to which he always has an answer, like,ย Only the one with all the gold teeth. When he dies, Iโ€™m actually going to inherit those.

When he goes to Montana to visit his family, he comes back with a stack of ten-cent Goodwill paperbacks for me:ย Sheโ€™ll Be Dying Around the Mountain,ย Purple Mountain Tragedy,ย Big Rock Candy Murder, andย Cowboy Stake Me Away, the last of which is actually about vampires and was misshelved.

When he stops by Trader Joeโ€™s on his way home from work, he brings me cartons of ice cream, Maine blueberry or Vermont maple.

So much of life is waiting for more of him, and even that torture is bliss.

One night, after months of sneaking around, while everyone is home, he offers me a spare movie ticketโ€”a work friend of his canceledโ€”and we leave the apartment together. Outside, he takes my hand and holds it tightly, his pulse tapping into my palm:ย you, you, you.

I ask what movie weโ€™re seeing. โ€œThere is no movie,โ€ he says. โ€œI just wanted to take you on a date.โ€

Date, I think.ย Thatโ€™s new.ย I hadnโ€™t even known to want a date with Wyn Connor, but now that itโ€™s been spoken, I feel a kind of breathless happy-sad. Like Iโ€™m missing this night before itโ€™s even begun. Every time he offers me more of him, it gets harder not to have it all.

We traipse around Little Italy for hours, stuffing ourselves with cannoli and gelato and cappuccinosโ€”or rather I stuffย myselfย while he tries bites. Heโ€™s not big on sweets.

He tells me he didnโ€™t grow up eating them, that the Connors were a โ€œmeat, potatoes, and Miracle Whip family,โ€ and then he says, โ€œDid you always love sugar this much?โ€

โ€œAlways,โ€ I say. โ€œAnd you just did that thing again.โ€ โ€œWhat thing?โ€

โ€œThe thing where you give me the tiniest kernel of Wyn, then turn things back to me.โ€

He rubs the back of his head, frowning.

I ask, โ€œWhy donโ€™t you like talking about yourself?โ€

He says, โ€œRemember when you told me you thought you were slow- release hot?โ€

โ€œI finally stopped falling asleep to that humiliating memory one month ago,โ€ I tell him, โ€œand now I have to start all over.โ€

He pulls me closer, hooks his arm around my shoulder as we make our way down the frosty, light-strewn sidewalk. After several seconds, he says, โ€œI think Iโ€™m slow-release boring.โ€

โ€œWhat are you talking about?โ€

He shrugs one shoulder. โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

I wrap my arms around his waist, beneath his coat. โ€œTell me,โ€ I say. โ€œPlease.โ€

He hesitates. โ€œItโ€™s just,โ€ he says, โ€œIโ€™m the kind of guy people are always more interested inย beforeย they get to know me.โ€

โ€œSaysย who,โ€ I ask.

โ€œTake your pick, Harriet.โ€

My brow knits. He laughs, but itโ€™s shallow.

โ€œIโ€™ve had like ten years to come to terms with this,โ€ he says. โ€œPeople are interested right up front, but it never lasts. I told you I donโ€™t date friends, and thatโ€™s why. Because once I get together with someone, really let them in, the novelty wears off fast. Itโ€™s been that way since high school, when girls would come from out of town for the summer, and itโ€™s still that way. Iโ€™m not all that interesting.โ€

โ€œStop,โ€ I say. โ€œThatโ€™s bullshit, and you know it.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not,โ€ he says. โ€œEven with Alison. I thought it would work with her, I really did. I figured Iโ€™d been going for the wrong people, so I went for someone more like me, who didnโ€™t have all these huge aspirations, so she wouldnโ€™t get bored so fast. Then she broke up with me for her yoga teacher. Said they connected on a deeper level than I was capable of. Iโ€™m . . . I donโ€™t know. Simple?โ€

He sounds self-conscious. My chest aches, like I feel the little sore spot in him, the thorn deep in between layers of muscle. Iโ€™d do anything to get it out.

I grab the lapels of his coat and look up into his face. โ€œFirst of all,โ€ I say, โ€œsimple isnโ€™t bad. Second of all, simple isnโ€™t stupid, and youโ€™reย notย stupid, and I donโ€™t know why youโ€™re always trying to convince yourself you are, but it really is bullshit, Wyn. And lastly, youโ€™re the opposite of slow-release boring. I like you so much more than when we first met. Partly because you actually answer my questions now, instead of turning everything around to flirt.โ€

His brow lifts. โ€œAnd whatโ€™s the other part?โ€ โ€œEverything,โ€ I say.

He laughs. โ€œEverything?โ€

โ€œYes, Wyn,โ€ I say. โ€œI like your body and your face and your hair and your skin, and I like how youโ€™re always warmer than me, and how you never sit still except when youโ€™re really trying to concentrate on what someoneโ€™s saying, and I like how you always fix things without being asked. Youโ€™re the only one of us who will actually take out the trash before itโ€™s spilling over. And every time youโ€™re doingย anythingโ€”going to the store or doing laundry or making yourself breakfastโ€”youโ€™ll always ask if anyone else needs anything, and I like how I know when youโ€™re about to text me from the other side of the room because you make this really specific face.โ€

He laughs against my cheek. I wish I could swallow the sound, that it would put down roots in my stomach and grow through me like a seed.

He says, โ€œTheย I want to go down on youย face?โ€

I hug him closer as we pause at aย DO NOT WALKย sign. โ€œI didnโ€™t have a name for it until now.โ€

The light changes, but instead of crossing, he draws me around the corner into an alleyway and kisses me against a brick wall until I lose track of time, ofย space. We become the only two people in the world.

Until a group of fratty drunk guys hollers at us from the street, and even then we donโ€™t stop kissing, our smiles colliding, our hands twisted in each otherโ€™s clothes.

When we draw apart, he rests his brow against mine, breathing hard in the cold. โ€œI think I love you, Harriet,โ€ he says.

Love, I think.ย Thatโ€™s new.ย And Iโ€™ll never be happy without it again.

Without any forethought, any worry, I tell him the truth. โ€œI know I love you, Wyn.โ€

He touches my chin, his hand shaking a little, and slides his nose down along mine. โ€œI love you so much, Harriet.โ€

At home, we gather our friends at the dining room table Wyn rebuilt from scraps for us, all our favorite people looking various degrees of terrified to hear what we have to say. Wyn and I terrified for them to hear it. โ€œWeโ€™re together,โ€ Wyn says, and when no one reacts, he adds, โ€œTogether.

Harriet and I.โ€

Sabrina runs to the fridge like sheโ€™s planning to vomit in it, only when she throws the door shut, sheโ€™s holding a bottle of prosecco, then grabbing mismatched coupes from the shelf over the stove. And Parth is on his feet, pulling Wyn into a hug, then squeezing me tight next, lifting me off the ground. He shakes me back and forth before setting me back down. โ€œAbout time our boy finally told you how he felt.โ€

Sabrina pops the cork and starts filling glasses. โ€œYou know that now that youโ€™reย finallyย together, you canโ€™tย everย break up, right?โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t put that kind of pressure on them,โ€ Cleo says.

โ€œThe pressureโ€™s on whether we admit it or not,โ€ Sabrina says. โ€œIf they break up, thisโ€โ€”she waves the bottle between usโ€”โ€œimplodes.โ€

โ€œLots of people stay friends if they break up,โ€ Cleo says, then quickly to me, โ€œnot that youโ€™re going to break up!โ€

โ€œIโ€™m with Sabrina on this one,โ€ Parth says.

She holds the bottle up as she tries to cup a hand around her ear. โ€œWhatโ€™s that? Is that just global warming Iโ€™m feeling, or has hell frozen over and Parth is actuallyย agreeingย with me on something?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m agreeing with you,โ€ Parth says, โ€œbecause this time, youโ€™re right. It was bound to happen eventually.โ€

She rolls her eyes, goes back to filling glasses.

โ€œHarry, Iโ€™m serious,โ€ Parth says, setting his hands on my shoulders. โ€œDonโ€™t you dare break my delicate angelโ€™s heart.โ€

Sabrina snorts. โ€œOh, come on.ย Wynย better not breakย herย heart.โ€ Cleo says, โ€œThereโ€™s no need for all this pressure.โ€

โ€œHe would never in a million years hurt her,โ€ Parth says to Sabrina, passing Wyn and me each a glass of champagne. Just like that, theyโ€™re back to their old squabbling selves.

โ€œAnd sheโ€™s been secretly obsessed with him for years,โ€ Sabrina argues. โ€œSpeaking of unspoken sexual tension,โ€ Wyn grumbles, waving his glass

in their direction. โ€œYou two want us to leave you alone for this argument, or can we be done now?โ€

โ€œEw!โ€ Sabrina says.

Parth pulls a face. โ€œThank you, Sabrina.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not sayingย youโ€™reย gross,โ€ she says. โ€œIโ€™m saying the idea ofย usย is gross. Can you imagine? And also, the last thing this friend group needs isย anotherย romantic entanglement. Weโ€™re already playing with fire here, and I really, really cannot lose this. Thisโ€โ€”she waves the bottle between us again

โ€”โ€œis my family.โ€

Itโ€™s mine too, but Iโ€™m not worried. I already know: I will love Wyn Connor until I die.

That night, for the first time, I sleep in Wynโ€™s room. We lie awake late, with the sheets kicked off us, our sweat drying, and he plays with my hair.

โ€œItโ€™s always a complete mystery to me,โ€ he murmurs, โ€œwhat youโ€™re thinking.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll help you out,โ€ I say. โ€œEighty percent of it is picturing you naked.โ€ He kisses my sticky forehead. โ€œIโ€™m serious.โ€

โ€œI am too,โ€ I say.

โ€œYouโ€™re a mystery to me, Harriet Kilpatrick.โ€

My smile falters. โ€œIโ€™m a mystery to me too,โ€ I say. โ€œI didnโ€™t realize how little I understood myself until I met Cleo and Sabrina. Theyโ€™re both so sure of how they feel about things.โ€

He pulls another curl straight, and the gentle tug sends a current down my center. โ€œWell, we should get to know you,โ€ he says.

โ€œI wouldnโ€™t know where to start.โ€ โ€œSomething small,โ€ he says.

โ€œLike what?โ€

He smiles unevenly. โ€œLike why do you love cozy mysteries?โ€ I shrug. โ€œI donโ€™t know. Theyโ€™re so . . . mild.โ€

His kiss against the side of my head melts into a laugh. โ€œMild?โ€

โ€œThe worst thing that can happen to a person happens, right at the start of the story,โ€ I explain. โ€œAnd itโ€™s like . . . this feeling of safety. You know exactly whatโ€™s going to happen by the end. So many things are unpredictable in life. I like things you can trust.โ€

He frowns, his golden hair mussed up off his forehead. Iโ€™m suddenly sure Iโ€™ve found the one unacceptable answer to his question, the one that makes him realize I am not the cool, sexy, mysterious woman he has confused me with.

His teeth scrape over the fullest part of his lip. โ€œYou can trust me, Harriet.โ€

In that moment, he pierces a little deeper into my heart, opens another door, finds an entire walled-off room I didnโ€™t realize was there.

He pulls me into his chest, and our heartbeats sync. Iโ€™ve never felt so certain of anything, so right, so safe.

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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